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  1. David P. Harmon

    American scenarist

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  1. David P. Harmon (September 3, 1918 in Buffalo – August 28, 2001 in Los Angeles) was an American scenarist and producer. Biography. Wife: Ruth Dubin Harmon; b. 1918; d. 1987. Filmography. Films. Television. External links. David P. Harmon at IMDb. David P. Harmon at Memory Alpha. Categories: American film producers. 1918 births. 2001 deaths.

  2. Writer: Star Trek. David P. Harmon was born on 3 September 1918 in Buffalo, New York, USA. He was a writer, known for Star Trek (1966), Mannix (1967) and McCloud (1970). He was married to Ruth Harmon. He died on 28 August 2001 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

  3. David P. Harmon (3 September 1918 – 28 August 2001; age 82) was the author of the Star Trek: The Original Series second season episodes "The Deadly Years" and "A Piece of the Action", and the Star Trek: The Animated Series first season episode "The Eye of the Beholder". He also submitted a story...

  4. Oct 25, 2001 · Oct 24, 2001 6:19pm PT. David P. Harmon. By Eileen Kowalski. WGA activist David P. Harmon, known for his work in radio, golden age TV and later shows such as “Star Trek” and “Gilligan’s...

  5. David P. Harmon: Story by: David P. Harmon: Based on: Die Brüder Grimm 1952 book by Hermann Gerstner: Produced by: George Pal: Starring: Laurence Harvey Claire Bloom Karlheinz Böhm Barbara Eden Walter Slezak Oscar Homolka Yvette Mimieux Russ Tamblyn Jim Backus Beulah Bondi Terry-Thomas Buddy Hackett: Cinematography: Paul C. Vogel: Edited by ...

  6. David P. Harmon. Credits (text only) Hide Writer (88 credits) 1984 Hotel (TV Series) (story by - 2 episodes) - Prisms (1984) ... (story by) - Tomorrows (1984) ... (story by) 1982 Today's F.B.I. (TV Series) (1 episode) - A Woman's Story (1982) Vega$ (TV Series) (story - 1 episode, 1981) (teleplay - 1 episode, 1979) (written by - 1 episode, 1979)

  7. David P. Harmon was a television writer and producer with a career spanning almost half a century; his writing credits include two episodes of the classic original Star Trek TV series, notably "A Piece of the Action" (based on a one-sentence story idea by series creator and producer Gene Roddenberry), the origin of the game Fizzbin.

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